Sentence examples for conflation that from inspiring English sources

Exact(13)

In that worldwide struggle, the conflation of 9/11 terrorism with Islam per se — a conflation that is at the heart of the anti-Park51 campaign — is a huge, unearned, dangerous strategic gift to Al Qaeda.

It is this conflation that gives rise to the terrifying notion – terrifying for those of us yet to become Russell Brand disciples, anyway – that politicians are in fact unnecessary.

This process involved equating "confession and frank sexuality with integrity and authenticity," a wild conflation that quickly became dogma precious and paramount to the new-media companies (like Vice) that ultimately usurped most of the magazine's cultural capital.

Meanwhile teachers with funny voices like mine are being encouraged to ditch their regional accents, to – and I quote – "adopt a more middle-class one", a common conflation that is still largely left unchallenged.

"Martha's been to university," they reportedly told her. "She's educated". Meanwhile teachers with funny voices like mine are being encouraged to ditch their regional accents, to – and I quote – "adopt a more middle-class one", a common conflation that is still largely left unchallenged.

As a preliminary matter, it appropriately identifies the definitional conflation that can unfortunately plague the term "cryptocurrency", and notes that definitional clarity is a prerequisite to avoiding regulatory jurisdictional overlap.

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Similar(47)

September 18 2012 December 31 201212 The conflations that Warhol visited upon art — chiefly, between painting and photography, and between handmade and mechanical production — were like little technical threads that, when tugged, unravelled any received sense of what artists are and do.

The conflations that Warhol visited upon art — chiefly, between painting and photography, and between handmade and mechanical production — were like little technical threads that, when tugged, unravelled any received sense of what artists are and do.

The Objection from Illocutionary/Perlocutionary Conflation argues that these two claims that moral language is used to express the attitudes of speakers, and that moral language is used to evoke or alter the attitudes of an audience conflate illocutionary acts and perlocutionary intentions (e.g., Hare 1952 Section 1.7 and 1997 Sections 1 5 1.6; Urmson 1968).

Obama's definition of conflation means that Congress is prohibited from enacting the same foreign commerce legislation for these two areas because the president does not like it on policy grounds — an absolutely unheard-of limitation on the foreign commerce power.

Journalists who work to separate fact from fiction see a dangerous conflation of stories that turn out to be wrong because of a legitimate misunderstanding with those whose clear intention is to deceive.

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